TCW vs. Rebels debates are not allowed in the Television forum. As in, discussions that descend into TCW/Rebels bashing/gushing will be subject to Mod action. Contrasting the themes, story lines, characters, etc. between the shows is allowed (welcomed, even). "Versus" debates/arguments, however, are a deal-breaker.

Isn't the Clovis arc supposed to be a trilogy? If the other arc would be a trilogy as well, it would fit nicely. After all there are only three episodes of the Maul arc left, so they have six episodes left until they reach 22.

Isn't the Clovis arc supposed to be a trilogy? If the other arc would be a trilogy as well, it would fit nicely. After all there are only three episodes of the Maul arc left, so they have six episodes left until they reach 22.

Isn't the Clovis arc supposed to be a trilogy? If the other arc would be a trilogy as well, it would fit nicely. After all there are only three episodes of the Maul arc left, so they have six episodes left until they reach 22.

Yes, but sadly the Ahsoka arc is four episodes.

In that case, they should go the extra length and make this season 23 episodes (but they probably won't be allowed to).

I wouldn't bat an eyelash if they did revive Jango in some corny way. Not having switched with a clone, but something campy like one of the clones has been accidentally imprinted with his memories and the Jango clone begins to piece together fragments and becomes Jango via having all of his memories and being biologically identical.

I've heard the name Spar mentioned, generally in a positive context. But knew nothing about him and did not know that he is exactly what I outlined (which I do think is an incredibly corny idea). I was trolling TFU II, if anything.

I've heard the name Spar mentioned, generally in a positive context. But knew nothing about him and did not know that he is exactly what I outlined (which I do think is an incredibly corny idea). I was trolling TFU II, if anything.

Spar's actually an interesting case, though. He somehow awakened the latent genetic memories of Jango. Unlike the Starkiller clone, though, Spar never actually thinks he's Jango, he just knows that there are memories in his head that don't actually belong to him. The result manifests in subtle ways: instead of storming off looking for Boba or anything analogous to Starkiller's search for Juno, for instance, Spar simply finds himself most comfortable in the Mandalorian culture Jango was raised in. But he remains his own person and never really loses who he is to the memories he'd inherited until old age began to set in, and he began to have trouble distinguishing what he had done and what were Jango's accomplishments. It's much more along the lines of Assassin's Creed's take on genetic memory than The Force Unleashed.